Could someone throw some light to the "format in camera" advice. I have both the HMC151 and the GH1, my question is if i have three SD cards, should i dedicate the cards to a specific camera or i can swap them and format them in whichever camera? i mean does it matter which camera i format the SD card in, so long as the card is "formated in camera"?
Thread: Formating the SD card
Results 1 to 10 of 14
-
Senior Member
- Join Date
- Dec 2009
- Posts
- 198
01-09-2011 02:48 AM
-
Senior Member
- Join Date
- Sep 2009
- Location
- UK
- Posts
- 1,021
01-09-2011 04:01 AM
You can swap them between cameras as much as you like. Panasonic will format the cards the same in each camera so I wouldn't worry about it. Just format in one of the cameras and you should be good to go.
FCP-X • FCP7 • Premiere Pro CS6 • Motion • After Effects • DSLRs • Camcorders • Lights • Gear!
Commercial Film & Wedding Video Production in Yorkshire Cinematic Wedding Films
Fun Photo Booth in Yorkshire
-
Junior Member
- Join Date
- Mar 2007
- Location
- Singapore
- Posts
- 11
-
01-09-2011 09:17 PM
I'd format in the camera, record for 10 seconds, play back and then turn the camera off and head into the field. I recently took it a step further and on the MAC got into the disk utility with cards and changed the secutiry settings to write ZEROS to the entire card. 8GB takes 15 minutes, 16GB takes 30. A simple format in the camera just removes, in my mind, the directory and intro or something to the files. They are still there for the most part. When the camera records, it just martches straight ahead. It remians to be seen if a smooth road of ZEROS is better than just a simple format.
-
Senior Member
- Join Date
- Dec 2010
- Location
- San Diego
- Posts
- 555
01-09-2011 11:29 PM
I'd say that's excessive, I've never had a problem with my cards using the in-camera format and I've done probably a hundred writes with each.
-
Senior Member
- Join Date
- Sep 2009
- Location
- UK
- Posts
- 1,021
01-10-2011 02:42 AM
FCP-X • FCP7 • Premiere Pro CS6 • Motion • After Effects • DSLRs • Camcorders • Lights • Gear!
Commercial Film & Wedding Video Production in Yorkshire Cinematic Wedding Films
Fun Photo Booth in Yorkshire
-
Senior Member
- Join Date
- Sep 2010
- Posts
- 759
01-10-2011 06:52 AM
goetzpd's approach is excessive, however it's good to do that once in a while.
There are three types of "formatting".
1. The quick format will just remove the File Allocation Table, leaving the data in tact. This is quick and what most cameras do.
2. A full format will actually format each sector of the media and read it back, letting you know if there's an error.
3. A low level format -- you should never need to perform this and most likely will not be able to so just ignore it.
Normally, what I do with new SD cards is I format them in Windows when I get them and I fill them up with random data until there is no space free. I then copy all the data FROM the card back TO the computer. I do this once or twice and then I'm good. In addition, I don't use the new card for critical footage (weddings) until I record a few hours of non-critical video first. Full formatting constantly is excessive and probably not a good idea. Every few months or so, I'll do it again but for the most part I just quick format the cards in the camera and away we go.
I have 3x 16GB and 1x 32GB Patriot cards and have not experienced any issues yet.
-
Junior Member
- Join Date
- Jan 2011
- Posts
- 5
01-11-2011 04:32 PM
Is there any reason not to format a card each time it is used? Does this lessen the memory or lifespan of the card?
-
Senior Member
- Join Date
- Jul 2005
- Location
- Kelowna, BC (Canada, Eh!)
- Posts
- 900
01-11-2011 05:29 PM
I format my cards in camera after I have dumped the footage. I don't see any reason not to.
-
Senior Member
- Join Date
- Sep 2010
- Posts
- 759
01-11-2011 07:58 PM
A quick format doesn't shorten the life of the card...it just deletes the FAT...it's kind if like deleting the table of contents in a book........the reader will not know where to start reading even though the actual book contents will be there, so the reader will just start reading from the beginning.
In a nutshell, format your card in the camera...this is fine....if you record heavily, just replace your SD card every 6-12 months...they're cheap.




Formating the SD card


